Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Teaching Center: The Do's and Don't's of Effective Lectures
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Teaching Center: The Do's and Don't's of Effective Lectures
Practical Tips
Not long ago, educated people studied rhetoric and oratory. No longer. And it shows.
Visuals
Dont turn your lectures into PowerPoint shows. Visuals can reinforce essential points. But visuals can
also be deadly. This is especially true of PowerPoint. So beware PowerPoints perils:
1. PowerPoint is inflexible.
2. PowerPoint is a crutch.
3. PowerPoint is boring.
4. PowerPoint distracts listeners. Why should they listen to you when they can read your slides?
Follow the Zen of PowerPoint:
1. Less is more. Use PowerPoint slides only when necessary:
2.
3. Students are also more likely to remember information that relates to ideas or experiences they are already
familiar with.
Use examples from student life, current events, or popular culture.
Ask students to generate their own examples from personal experience.
Tell students how new information relates to previous lectures in your course.
Show students how specific skills can be applied to real-world problems.
Create activities and assignments that ask students to fit new information into the overall themes of the course.
*
The Graduate School of Arts & Sciences Teaching Center wants to help you to:
prepare effective cover letters, teaching and research statements, fellowship applications, and job talks
deal with anxiety, challenges to your authority, and other classroom issues
design innovative courses
deliver scintillating, substantive lectures and lead stimulating, successful discussions and labs
respond appropriately and effectively to shy, withdrawn, disgruntled, or disruptive students
use technology more imaginatively